Continued participation in a ten-year tight control treat-to-target study in rheumatoid arthritis: why keep patients doing their best?

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Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaArthritis care & research
Año 2015

Este artículo está incluido en 1 Revisión sistemática Revisiones sistemáticas (1 referencia)

Este artículo es parte de los siguientes hilos de publicación
  • BeSt [Behandel-Strategieën [“treatment strategies”]] (35 documentos)
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OBJECTIVE:

To identify risk factors for early study termination and motivators for adherence to a long-term followup trial and to improve completeness of long-term studies.

METHODS:

Risk factors for early termination in 508 included patients were identified through Cox regression analysis. Patients completing the 10-year followup filled in a questionnaire on possible motives for continued study participation.

RESULTS:

Risk factors for early termination were higher age (hazard ratio [HR] 1.03, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.02-1.04), functional disability during the preceding year (HR 1.54, 95% CI 1.20-1.99), having achieved drug-free remission (HR 6.62, 95% CI 2.07-21.14), limited joint damage (HR 0.98, 95% CI 0.97-0.995 for actual damage; HR 0.83, 95% CI 0.73-0.94 for damage progression), and few adverse events (HR 0.35, 95% CI 0.26-0.47). A total of 288 of 313 patients (92%) attending the last visit answered the questionnaire. The majority mentioned contributing to scientific research (97% agreed), helping other patients (91%), and learning about new treatment strategies (84%) and their disease (85%) as reasons to continue participation. Next, patients mentioned tight control (202 of 278 patients), good treatment strategy (128 of 278), good medication (117 of 278), and good half-term results (102 of 278) as motivators. More than 95% of patients experienced participation "as expected" or "better than expected." Additional examinations during yearly visits (extra questionnaires, imaging) were mentioned as "worse than expected" (10%), as was answering routine questionnaires (7%).

CONCLUSION:

Continued participation was relatively high in the Treatment Strategies for Rheumatoid Arthritis (BeSt) Study. Higher age, functional disability, drug-free remission, little joint damage, and few adverse events predicted early study termination. Main motives for continued participation were a willingness to contribute to research, help future patients, and because patients had good experiences with the study protocol.
Epistemonikos ID: 82f22e4471d89a35fe647c66f07ddeaca0f7281e
First added on: Feb 01, 2019